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From YouTube: London OpenShift Commons Gathering 2019 Collaboration in Action Community Update Diane Mueller
Description
London OpenShift Commons Gathering 2019 Collaboration in Action
Community Update
Diane Mueller Red Hat
A
So
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
me,
my
name
is
Diane
Mueller
I'm,
the
director
of
community
development
for
Red
Hat
for
the
cloud
platform
and
very
specifically
for
openshift
and
okd
the
open
source
side
of
this,
and
today
you
are
at
an
open
shift.
Commons
gathering,
which
is
our
community,
a
rack.
That's
built
up
around
the
open,
shipped
ecosystem.
It
can,
it
is
constitutes
contributors,
users,
service
providers
hosts
the
upstream
project
leads
all
of
whom
you're
going
to
hear
from
a
little
bit
today.
I
really
want
to
thank
you
for
coming
out.
A
A
And
so
we've
made
a
lot
of
time
for
breaks
for
lunch
and
after
today,
in
the
evening,
upon
a
very
nice
reception
area,
which
also
has
a
nice
beautiful
view
of
the
river
we're
having
a
reception,
that's
being
sponsored
by
a
toast
and
Microsoft.
So
we're
very
grateful
for
that.
So
we've
got
pretty
much
I.
Think
everybody
in
the
room.
A
That's
coming
I'm,
just
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
red
hats
perspective
on
open
source
that
it
is
indeed
the
source
of
all
the
innovation
that
happens
at
red
hat
and
in
your
organization's
and
in
github.
There's
over
a
million
projects
right
now
and
github
and
well
there's
a
lot
of
Red
Hatters
working
on
tons
of
those.
The
project
that
I
work
on
specifically
is
open
shift
and
the
open
shift
open
source
side
of
things
which
is
called
we've
been
renamed.
A
So
we're
really
all
about
today
talking
about
how
all
these
open
source
projects
and
the
communities
around
them
are
providing
for
collaboration
and
cross
community
collaboration
with
all
of
these
different
upstream
projects
and
helping
you
to
make
the
connections
between
all
of
these
projects
and
understand
how
they
all
interleave
and
are
interwoven
and
are
interdependent.
And
hopefully
this
will
inspire
you
to
contribute
to
use
this.
These
projects
and
contribution
isn't
just
about
you
know
adding
a
piece
of
code
or
even
just
documentation.
A
Your
feedback
is
essential
to
this
process,
so
we're
really
hoping
to
get
that.
So
a
quick
update,
you
may
have
noticed
floating
around
the
Internet's
again,
this
cute
little
panda,
the
cute
little
panda
signifies
a
renaming
and
a
openshift
origin
to
open
to
okd,
which
represents
our
changeover
to
being
a
kubernetes
distribution.
We
flipped
from
being
a
Ruby
on
Rails
MongoDB,
app
platform
as-a-service
into
something
that
was
based
on
kubernetes
two
and
a
half
years
ago.
Maybe
three
now
and
we
rebranded
to
represent
that
the
repos
are
still
in
the
origin
repo.
A
So
if
you
have
scripts
or
anything
that
neat
are
dependent
on
that,
we
didn't
change
the
name
of
the
repo.
So
just
so
you
know
so
we're
delivering
openshift
through
okd.
It
is
our
community
kubernetes
distribution
and
today
is
a
community
day.
It's
not
about
sales
and
marketing,
though
someone
might
hit
on
you
and
out
there
in
the
foyer
as
our
sponsors,
or
something
and
that's
that's
quite
okay.
A
But
we're
really
trying
to
talk
to
the
aspect
today
of
how
all
of
these
different
projects
feed
into
OpenShift
and
build
out
our
product
offerings
and
that
all
of
these
things
have
interdependencies
and
projects
and
companies
that
are
depend
on
them.
That
are
also
contributing
back
into
openshift
itself,
and
we
are
trying
very
hard
to
keep
those
lines
of
communications
open
and
that's
really.
The
goal
of
OpenShift
Commons
is
to
be
able
to
sync
up.
Have
you
connect
with
your
peers
and
get
connected
to
the
people
that
you
need
to
know
today?
A
Some
of
the
OpenShift
engineers
and
product
managers,
some
of
the
other
customers
who
may
be
doing
things
similar
to
what
you
are
planning
to
do
or
doing
I'm
very
much
interested
in
having
you
tell
your
stories,
as
opposed
to
me.
Talk
a
lot
I'm,
actually
tired
of
my
own
voice,
I
love
to
give
away
the
podium.
So
there
are
now
over
470
member
organizations,
some
of
the
William
I.
A
Think
all
of
the
folks
who
are
sponsoring
out
there
are
member
members
of
that
there's,
a
a
wonderful
slack
channel
and
a
mailing
list
and
lots
of
SIG's
that
you
can
join
up
and
come
with
it.
So
Commons
really
for
us
is
a
bit
of
a
new
community
model,
because
in
the
past
a
community
manager
was
probably
someone
who's
trying
to
corral
you
to
give
code
contributions
to
my
project.
A
But
we
also
view
it
really
as
a
communications
channel,
and
we
do
that
by
hosting
events
like
today,
where
you
actually
get
to
physically
be
in
the
same
room
with
each
other.
We
host
open
chef,
Commons
briefings,
which
are
usually
twice
a
week
when
I'm,
not
traveling
and
they're.
Probably
gonna
go
to
three
times
a
week
shortly
as
we
bring
in
some
of
the
open
shift.
A
Don't
open
stack
folks
to
do
briefings
in
there
a
half
an
hour
presentation
with
live
Q&A
that
you
can
ask
questions
on
you
can
present
what
you're
doing
you
can
ask
questions
of
anyone's
there
and
they're
all
up
on
our
YouTube
channel.
There
are
a
number
of
SIG's,
the
ML,
the
telco,
the
ops
one,
there's
a
number
of
them
that
meet
usually
on
Fridays
once
a
month,
and
the
mailing
lists,
as
I
mentioned,
are
really
pretty
active
these
days.
A
So
really
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
get
as
much
content
as
we
can
that's
reusable
that
may
not
be
corporate
marketing.
It's
mostly
technical
stuff,
as
you
can
see
from
this
one,
it's
Kafka
talked
and
then
the
talking
has
been
done
by
Amadeus,
which
is
a
big
user
and
the
supporter
of
open
ship.
There's
lots
I
think
there's
about
almost
180
briefings
up
on
the
YouTube
channel.
You
can
find
all
of
these
events
on
the
Commons
OpenShift
org
events
calendar
and
it's
pretty
active
right.
A
A
Five
years
ago
there
were
only
five
external
to
red
hat
companies
contributing
to
open
shift
when
we
were
just
a
platform
as
a
service
on
Ruby
and
rails,
and
we've
grown
in
the
past
couple
two
years
with
this
new
model
to
having
over
70
of
you
contributing
back
into
the
project,
which
is
really
pretty
phenomenal.
For
you
know
a
typical
typical
Red
Hat,
a
project,
especially
one
that's
pretty
directed
by
Red
Hat,
doesn't
often
have
a
lot
and
there's
also
there's
a
couple
of
reasons
for
that.
A
One
is
a
lot
of
the
customers,
aren't
allowed
to
contribute
and
Duncan
Lao
II
I'm,
not
sure,
if
he's
in
the
room
yet,
but
he's
going
to
talk
a
little
bit.
The
gentleman
from
credit
Swiss
about
how
to
enable
your
company
to
enable
you
to
contribute
to
open
shift
up
to
open
source
and
open
shift,
hopefully,
and
some
of
the
some
of
the
work
that
you
have
to
do,
especially
if
you're
in
a
financial
company
to
get
that
to
make
that
happen.
A
A
As
as
we
evolved
to
being
more
kubernetes,
centric
offering
we've
been
very
heavily
at
Red,
Hat,
contributing
and
collaborating
on
kubernetes,
and
if
you
go
to
any
of
the
kubernetes
SIG's
you'll
often
see
a
red,
Hatter,
co-leading
or
chairing
any
many
of
the
SIG's
in
there
there's
a
differentiation
between
the
SIG's
and
the
open
chef,
Commons
kubernetes,
the
kubernetes
SIG's,
is
where
the
technical
work
is
done
and
in
the
open
chef
Commons,
it's
more
about
best
sharing,
best
practices
and
lessons
learned.
So
there's
a
little
distinction.
There
I
think
it's
a
good
one.
A
But
it's
also,
you
can
see
where
there's
Red
Hatters
the
larger
sort
of
backwards
jellyfish
and
the
lower
one,
the
larger
one
is
kubernetes
and
the
lower
one
is
us,
and
you
can
see
the
number
of
people
that
are
Red
Hatters
that
are
contributing
and
then,
as
it
spreads
out,
we
can
see
the
number.
The
dots
are,
the
number
of
non
Red
Hatters
that
are
working
in
both
projects,
and
then
these
are
all
of
the
developers
that
are
working
in
from
everywhere
that
are
working
on
it.
A
But
this
is
the
really
interesting
one
and
I
did
a
deeper
dive
on
this
topic,
explaining
some
of
the
personas
in
here
at
dev
kampf
last
week
and
I'll
share
that
link.
Whether
but
the
really
interesting
thing
to
me
is
all
these
different
colors
or
all
the
different
organizations
that
are
working
on
both
of
our
projects.
It
really
signifies
those
seventy
companies
that
are
really
collaborating
in
both
spaces.
So
it's
it's
been
a
very
interesting
transition
from
being
a
sort
of
a
standalone
non.
A
You
know
not
collaborating
with
larger
open-source
projects
as
much
to
working
in
the
kubernetes
space,
so
it
requires
a
lot
of
communication,
a
lot
of
communication
on
releases
and
release
cycles
and
all
kinds
of
interesting
aspects
of
it.
So
this
has
been
really
the
very
interesting
exponential
growth
in
the
interest
in
kubernetes
and
the
folks
that
are
contributing
into
open
ships
and
really
that
was
just
kubernetes
and
OpenShift.
A
If
you
look
at
all
of
the
other
projects
that
we
use,
especially
things
like
open
tracing
and
Jager
and
container
D
and
lots
of
things
that
we
use
that
are
under
the
cnc
m4
Brella
you'll
understand
how
those
relationships
all
expand
and
katrien
connect
it.
It's
very
gratifying
to
see
where
things
are
going.
The
training
that's
going
on
in
the
other
room
right
now
is
on
this
new
thing
called
the
operator
framework.
How
many
of
you
have
heard
of
the
operator
framework?
Yes,
my
work
is
being
heard.
This
is
good.
A
I
really
love
this,
so
the
operator
framework
is
then
gonna.
Take
that
again
and
expand
this
whole
bunch
of
connections
to
a
whole
lot
of
other
projects
too.
So
we're
just
going
to
see
more
and
more
of
the
need
for
this
peer-to-peer
face-to-face
communication
channels
being
built
up
and
so
we're
hoping
that
you'll
really
work
with
your
peers
work
with
us
help.
Let
us
help
you
connect
with
each
other
and
in
some
ways
openshift
Commons
represents
red-hats
stepping
back
and
letting
people
connect
directly
to
each
other
who,
via
the
openshift
Commons
so
I.
A
If
you
haven't,
joined
openshift
Commons.
Yet
please
do
so
I'll
be
around
the
whole
day
in
the
evening
into
the
reception
and
I
can
set
you
up.
I
want
to
give
a
big
shout
out
in
advance.
You'll
hear
me:
shout
I'm
completely
grateful
to
all
of
the
sponsors
for
this,
because
this
is
a
community
event,
and
this
is
a
very
swanky
space
for
us
to
be
in
as
community
folks.
So
please
do.
The
lunch
will
be
served
on
both
ends.
So
don't
just
all
aggregate
down
to
one
end
go
to
both
ends.
A
The
breaks
are
there
meet
with
everybody,
because
they're
doing
us
all
a
very
big
favor
getting
us
here
today
and
Europe
doing
us
a
very
big
favor
coming
here
today.
So
I'm
really
grateful
for
that.
So
welcome
to
the
open,
shipped
universe,
I'm
gonna
bring
on
Brian
grace
Lee,
who
is
right
here
in
the
wings
and
we're
gonna
set
him
up
for
our
first
keynote
and
then
we'll
go
right
into
the
next
couple
and
please
please
welcome
Brian
Grace
Lee.